Paul
Goble
Staunton, October
20 – Increasingly frequent displays of interest by Ukrainian parliamentarians
in the non-Russian nations inside the Russian Federation and especially in the
Ukrainian communities there has prompted Russian commentators to try to discredit
these groups by linking them to the Axis powers before and during World War II.
(On Ukrainian interest in non-Russian
nations in the Russian Federation generally, see windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/05/ukrainian-parliament-calls-for-new.html,
windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/04/non-russians-inside-russia-more.html
and windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2018/12/kyiv-to-focus-attention-on-moscows.html;
on Kyiv’s interest in Ukrainian communities there, see windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2018/08/kyiv-takes-up-cause-of-ukrainian-far.html).
The latest example of Moscow articles
in response which seek to discredit the Ukrainian communities inside Russia’s borders
is one by Timur Sagdiyev for the Russian Seven portal entitled “Why did the
Japanese Finance Ukrainian Nationalists in the Far East” (russian7.ru/post/zachem-yaponcy-finansirovali-ukrainsk/).
Sagdiyev focuses less n Japanese involvement
with Ukrainians in the Far East during the Russian civil war when both local Ukrainians
and Kyiv sought to create Ukrainian military units and even a Ukrainian state to
be linked with Kyiv but were blocked by Admiral Kolchak, the White Russian ruler
in Siberia than n Japanese involvement with Ukrainian emigres in the 1930s.
He cites Irkutsk historian Leonid
Kuras to the effect that “the Japanese planned during the war to provoke an
anti-Soviet uprising of Ukrainians in the Primorsky kray and link it with the counter-revolutionary
movement in Ukraine and with the movement of Ukrainians in Europe.”
The author of this plan, Sagdiyev
says, was Mitataro Komatsbara,the head of Japanese counter-intelligence in
Harbin, who believed that the 10,000 Ukrainian emigres in Manchuria could be
used against Russia. (On that, see Ivan Svit’s Ukrains’ko-iapons’ki vzaiemyny (in
Ukrainian, New York, 1972.) and John Stephan’s The Russian Far East (Stanford, 1994).)
The Japanese financed such Ukrainian
groups there as the Ukrainian Émigré Union, the Ukrainian National Society, and
the Ukrainian Youth Union as well as the journal Dalekhy Skhid, which
promoted the idea of a Ukrainian state in the Far East under Tokyo’s auspices,
Sagdiyev says.
In 1934, the Japanese created a
Ukrainian military organization in Harbin as well as a military school to train
young Ukrainians for eventual insertion into the USSR’s Ussury Kray. And for a period, Japan cooperated as well with
Ukrainian nationalist organizations in Europe as well.
However, when the Japanese refrained
from invading the Soviet Union in 1941, their support for these groups
declined; and in 1943, it ended altogether.
When the Soviet Army entered Harbin in 1945, it arrested the leaders of
this community and either executed or confined them in the GULAG (http://esu.com.ua/search_articles.php?id=40544
and varjag2007su.livejournal.com/4239231.html).
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